I have always thought of myself not as a consultant – that is, someone with specific expertise to whom you ask directed questions and who gives you what you think/hope are the right answers – but rather as an “advisor”, i.e. someone whose role it is to sit next to you for a certain period of time and draw your attention to a certain number of things to which you might wish to give a closer look. (NB. My experience shows that it is usually a lot more comfortable to work with consultants.)

So here I am just about to get on the plane for Helsinki where I shall be working and meeting over the next two weeks with a couple of hundred people, almost all Finns, in individual meetings and group and plenary sessions as you can find spelled out elsewhere on this site – and through all of that to talk together about equity and transport, private actions and public policy.

Over the last two months of preparatory work with my Finnish colleagues on this, while at the same time working in parallel with our international networks to test these ideas and extend the knowledge base, I have come up with a list of questions which I am about to stuff into my pocket — and when I land in the Nordic capital doing my best to ask and then listen to what they have to say. At the end of all this, some time in mid-April, I shall try to fashion what I have heard and learned into a relatively short strategic report with observations, reflections, findings and perhaps eventually some recommendations.

Here is the short list of the questions I am bringing to Helsinki:

1. What is equity (and what is not-equity)?

2. How does this concept work in the Finnish language? Are there significant differences of which we should be aware? (I am hopeful that my Finnish colleagues will write this u so that w can add it to he site.)

3. Is mobility/access a “basic need’, a human right of citizens in an active democracy.

4. Does the extraordinary Finnish equity-based education system give us a leg-up when it comes to the proposed push to equity-based transport?

5. What is not-Equity in transport? Examples from Helsinki?

6. What is Equity-Based Transport? Examples from Helsinki?

7. Is there a non-car majority in Helsinki? Who are they, what are their needs and how can we serve them best?

8. Is “Public Transport” (i.e. for the most part scheduled fixed-route services) the answer for Helsinki’s 21st century patterns and needs?

9. What is the future of the automobile in Helsinki, and Finland more generally?

10. What does a”better than car” mobility package look like?

11. What about the role of the ITC interface? Is this going to be critical? Or an option?

12. Should equity/transport strategies have an eye to job creation and lifetime learning?

13. Do Social Media tools make a difference? How?

14. Are the forces for change/improvement working together in Helsinki? Or are they mainly working on their separate specific agendas and coming up with priorities and demands of their own?

15. A discussions of civil society and the “social brain” as an untapped resource (lighting the synapses)

16. What would an Equity-Based Transport system for Helsinki look like? – and what would be the best way to get there? Will it cost a lot? Will it be disruptive and divisive? Will it take a lot of time to start to get there?

PS. Are we talking about a major paradigm change? And if so, what is wrong with the one we already have?

Hidden agenda

As I look at all this on my way to the airport, what strikes me is that this is one of those instances in which the questions are perhaps more important than the answers. And indeed I figure that it is my role here, not to come up with cocky answers to each of these, so much as to encourage the asking and subsequent discussions of all that touches on equity and transport for the city and beyond.

Eric Britton

Paris, 14 March 2012

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Other voices:

Twenty four hours ago, I contacted a short list of my international colleagues who I know have deep expertise in these matters and asked them if they could come up with a short list, I suggested five, of questions that they would like to hear about in this context. They are, I would say, every bit as valid as the ones that I have chosen based on my own experience and perspective.

Let’s have a look at what they have to say:

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From Elizabeth Deakin
Professor of City and Regional Planning
University of California, Berkeley

1. There is always the question of intergenerational equity vs. equity for the people out there today and how to serve both interests.

2. Cars are making the lives of some better, but they are making the lives of many others worse. Discussions of internalizing externalities seem to get very little traction. What can we do to make full cost pricing a way to move forward? Or if this is Quixotic, what other options are more likely to succeed?

3. Would free bikes for everyone be a step forward? (can you ride a bike in a burka?)

4. Where are the children in this discussion?

5. Where are the many adults who have mobility limitations, physical or economic? (where am I in 20 35 years = I plan to stay active till I drop, but what if that is increasingly difficult? Do I have to sit by the window and knit or tat or something equally implausible?)

6. Could we reclaim most streets for people and make the cars stay in their place, on separate guideways that do not intrude on places for people?

7. How do we manage freight and urban goods delivery in a less obnoxious way?

1. What are the categories through which ‘equity’ is defined?
2. What is defined as ‘equitable accessibility’, given that 25% of >65 years olds simply can’t walk more than 400m (the benchmark for younger people’s definition of ‘access’ to public transport
3. What coverage of access to toilets on transit is addressed? pregnant women and elder men need this as a key accessibility and equity factor
4. To what extent is ;equity of transport access to key resource (post office, bank, doctor, hospital, government offices) covered or addressed?
5. What tradeoffs between safety, access, cost etc etc are covered to ensure equity of access and use by all different modes including powered two wheelers and electric on and off road mobility solutions?
Hate to answer any of these myself Eric!

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Jonathan Morris, World Citizen
La Colle Sur Loup, France

1. what are the arguments against gov’t spending on equity in transport?
2. Where does it stand in the list of priorities?

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David Levinger
Mobility Education Foundation
Washington, DC

How can we increase equity in transport if we don’t place a priority on educating people about how the multimodal system operates?

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Anzir Boodoo, PhD student
The Institute for Transport Studies
The University of Leeds UK

2. Do pedestrians (including those who cannot walk, or use other mobility aids) get considered first, ahead of motorised traffic?

3. Are all travel modes integrated? Is it easy to swap between foot, cycle, bus, tram, train and car?

4. Is it possible to get to all places easily on foot or cycle, and all places reasonably by public transport?

5. Is the network of public transport services, footways and cycle ways easy to understand and navigate, even for people with cognitive impairments (e.g. Learning Disabilities, dyslexia) and sensory impairments (e.g. blindness, deafness)

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Enrico Bonfatti
Editor, Nuuva Mobilita
Bergamo, Italy

1. Public Transport: we use to consider car as the unfairest mean of transport by far. Nonetheless there are many equity issues involved in other means of transport. Public transport could be unfair as well: how, for instance, does a new HSR affect the lives of those not having access to it but whose houses, villages and towns are crossed by the line?

2 And how much priority must we give to HSR development and how much to improving regional trains serving commuters living in the towns’ surroundings if, how is often the case (and in Italy it is), there are not enough funds to support both of them?

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Leena Silfverberg
Head of Unit
Helsinki City Planning Department, Transport
Kansakoulukatu 1 A FI-00099 City of Helsinki

1. Who is (are) the most dominating or powerful actors in the sector from your point of view.

2. And in opposite, whose status most needs improving?

3. How does this inequity show? Is the situation changing, to which direction?